BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
[0001] The present invention relates to a method of determining radioactive nuclides by
obtaining time interval of pulses incident to an α-ray detector and analyzing it.
[0002] In the measurement of radioactivity, pulse-height discrimination of radiations (the
energy incident to a radiation detector) is carried out and, by the comparison with
a previously prepared energy library, the identification of a radioactive nuclide
is carried out. However, under the environment wherein plural radioactive nuclides
exist and when the energies of the nuclides are closed to each other, they cannot
be discriminated, whereby it is necessary to carry out a chemical separation.
[0003] For example, when an abnormal leakage accident occurs in nuclear facilities, there
is a possibility that an α-ray releasing nuclide having a long half-life, such as
plutonium, etc., contained in the nuclear fuel is released in the environment. Thus,
it is necessary to quickly determine plutonium in the suspended dust in the atmosphere.
Practically, by sucking the air by a pump, the suspended dust in the air is collected
on a filter and after recovering the dust filter, the dust is measured by an α-ray
detector (for example, a silicon surface barrier semiconductor detector) and a pulse-height
discrimination is carried out.
[0004] However, in this case, radon (Rn), polonium (Po), lead (Pb), bismuth (Bi), etc.,
which are the disintegrated products of uranium (U) and thorium (Th) largely existing
in nature are detected as the predominant nuclides and plutonium (Pu) and the like
are concealed in the background. Accordingly, it is necessary that, prior to the α-ray
measurement by a silicon semiconductor detector, the recovered dust filter is subjected
to a pre-treatment in which the dust filter is wholly decomposed with nitric acid
and hydrofluoric acid and then plutonium is isolated by an anionic exchange method.
[0005] Because such a chemical separation is indispensable in the prior art techniques,
a complicated operation is required, and a quick determination cannot be carried out.
Incidentally, for the analysis of plutonium in the suspended dust in the atmosphere
described above, the time of about one week is required for the determination thereof.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0006] An object of the invention is to provide a method capable of determining radioactive
nuclides having the approximate energies without carrying out a chemical separation.
[0007] Another object of the invention is to provide a method capable of simply and quickly
determining at a high sensitivity even an α-ray releasing nuclide having a long half-life
contained in an environmental sample.
[0008] As is conventionally well known, a radioactive nuclide has the half-life specific
to the nuclide and, while releasing α-rays and the like, is disintegrated to another
nuclide according to the following equation.

wherein,
A: present radioactivity,
Ao: initial radioactivity,
λ: disintegration constant, λ = ln (2)/t(1/2),
t(1/2): half-life,
t: elapsed time.
[0009] This shows that, paying attention to the half-life, a half of the parent nuclide
A becomes a progeny B within t
(1/2) hours. The invention is directed to a method of identifying and determining an objective
nuclide without carrying out a chemical separation, by utilizing the principle described
above, that is, by detecting the α-rays released at the disintegration of the nuclide
by a detector and matching the time distribution thereof with the half-life of the
objective nuclide.
[0010] According to the present invention, there is provided a method of determining radioactive
nuclides comprising:
inputting a data of pulses incident to an α-ray detector in a computer;
obtaining and plotting a time distribution of the incident pulses by using a very
short time measuring timer;
obtaining from the plotted time distribution of the incident pulses, the following
whole generating probability P(t) from a parent nuclide to a disintegrated product
thereof by fitting the linear originated in a random event corresponding to the background
and the non-linear originated in correlated event of the parent nuclide-disintegrated
product by using least squares method

wherein,
P(t): the probability of starting from an optional pulse and expiring at the event
within a very short time dt after t milliseconds,
λ dt: the probability of generating the correlated events within a very short time
dt after t milliseconds,
C dt: the probability of generating the random events within a very short time dt
after t milliseconds,
αt: the probability that the events are caused by the correlated events;
subtracting the random events portion from the P(t) to thereby extract the correlated
events portion; and
dividing the extracted correlated events portion by the measured time, the amount
of supplied sample and the counting efficiency to thereby obtain the radioactivity
per unit.
[0011] The invention also provides a method of determining radioactive nuclides comprising:
determining nuclides, which are unnecessary for the measurement by the method described
in claim 1, on the basis of the half-life thereof and the time intervals of the incident
pulses;
removing the thus determined nuclides from the energy spectra of objective nuclides
to thereby lower the background and reduce the detection limit value of the objective
nuclides; and
detecting the objective nuclides by using pulse-height discrimination (energy discrimination).
[0012] As described above, by analyzing the time interval of the incident pulses, and extracting
the disintegration events, it becomes possible to determine natural radioactive nuclides
such as radon, etc. Also, by extracting and subtracting the disintegrated progenies
of radon and radium existing in nature from the whole pulses, a background in the
analysis of plutonium can be removed. Thus plutonium contained in a suspended dust
in the atmosphere can be determined without carrying out a chemical separation.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0013]
Fig. 1 shows a view explaining the relation of the incident pulses and the fixed time.
Fig. 2 shows a view showing the pattern of the existing states of the incident pulses
in the fixed time.
Fig. 3 shows a graph showing the relation of the time interval and counts.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE EMBODIMENTS
[0014] Pulses incident in an α-ray detector such as a liquid scintillation detector, a silicon
surface barrier detector, etc., are amplified and inputted in a computer through a
multi-channel analyzer, and the time distribution of the incident pulses is obtained
by using a very short time measuring timer and plotted. Also, a fixed time as shown
in Fig. 1 is established and how the incident pulses (shown by a reference number
10) exist in the fixed time is analyzed. The pulses incident in the α-ray detector
are classified into those originated in the background and those originated in the
correlated event of parent nuclide-disintegrated progenies.
[0015] These pulses are classified into various combinations shown in Fig. 2. In the figure,
the pulses (shown by a reference number 12) shown by white show the correlated events
and the pulses (shown by a reference number 14) shown by black show the non-correlated
(random) events. The probability of each combination is as follows.




wherein
P (t) dt: the probability of starting from an optional pulse and expiring at the events
within a very short time dt after t milliseconds,
Pb (t): the probability of starting from an optional pulse and entering N random pulses
after t milliseconds,
λ dt: the probability of generating the correlated events within a very short time
dt after t milliseconds,
C dt: the probability of generating the random events within a very short time dt
after t milliseconds, and
αt: the probability that the events are caused by the correlated events.
[0016] Now, the whole generating probability P (t) becomes as follows:

and, since the following equation

is obtained by the Maclaurin's expansion, the probability of the correlated events
from the whole parent nuclides to the disintegrated progenies thereof becomes as follows:

[0017] The above equation means that the correlated event portion α
t · exp (-λt) · λ dt to be extracted exists on the random events portion (background)
of C dt. This state is shown in Fig. 3.
[0018] Conversely speaking, as being understood from the foregoing, the P(t) is obtained
from the time distribution of the plotted incident pulses, by fitting the linear originated
in the random events corresponding to the background and the non-linear originated
in the correlated events of parent nuclide-disintegrated progenies by using least
squares method:

The random events portion is then subtracted from the P(t) to thereby extract the
correlated events portion from the parent nuclide to the disintegrated products thereof.
[0019] Now, in the measurement of a radioactive nuclide (radioactivity), the number of incident
radiations is counted. For example, when 600 radiations enter during the measuring
time of 60 seconds, the number of the radiations corresponds to 10 per second. However,
the counting efficiency differs according to a detector (for example, when 40 radiations
can be counted in 100 radiations, the counting efficiency becomes 40%). Accordingly,
it is necessary to divide the counted number by the counting efficiency. For example,
when a detector having the counting efficiency of 40% counts 10 radiations per second,
there are 25 radiations per second, in fact. Furthermore, they are the radiations
from a sample of 100 g, the number of the radiations becomes 0.25 radiation per gram
of the sample.
[0020] Therefore, by dividing the correlated events portion extracted as described above
by the measured time, the amount of the supplied sample and the counting efficiency,
the radioactivity per unit can be obtained (that is, the radioactive nuclide can be
determined). By such a time interval analysis method, the radioactive nuclides having
half-life of from millisecond to microsecond can be selectively extracted. As the
examples thereof, there are
220Rn →
216Po →,
219Rn →
215Po →,
221Pr →
217At →, etc.
[0021] Further, by determining nuclides, which are unnecessary for the measurement by the
above-described method, on the basis of the half-life thereof and the time interval
analysis method of the incident pulses, and by subtracting the thus determined nuclides
from the energy spectra of an objective nuclide, the background can be lowered and
the detection limit value of the objective nuclide can be reduced. Thus, a nuclide
having a long half-life, such as plutonium, etc., can be determined without carrying
out a chemical separation.
[0022] As described hereinbefore, when an abnormal leakage accident occurs in nuclear facilities,
there is a possibility that an α-ray releasing nuclide having a long half-life, such
as plutonium, etc., contained in the nuclear fuel is released in the environment.
It is therefore necessary to quickly determine plutonium in the suspended dust in
the atmosphere. Practically, by sucking the air by a pump, the suspended dust in the
air is collected on a filter, and after recovering the dust filter, the dust is measured
by an α-ray detector. In this case, Rn, Po, Pb, Bi, etc., which are the progenies
of U and Th largely existing in nature are detected as the predominant nuclides and
Pu, etc., are concealed in the background. Accordingly, when the time interval analysis
is carried out and these natural radioactive nuclides having short half-lives are
subtracted, an α-ray releasing nuclide only having a long half-life such as plutonium,
etc., can be pulse height-discriminated and the determination of the α-ray releasing
nuclide having a long half-life can be carried out. The pulse-height discrimination
is conducted by matching the measured energy with the energy library specific to the
radioactive nuclide. Thereby, at emergency, plutonium in the suspended dust in the
atmosphere can be quickly measured without need of a chemical separation. In addition,
by this method, the concentration of plutonium, etc., of a background level is shown
in an ordinary time.
[0023] Further, since radon, thoron and progenies thereof can be extracted by using the
method of the invention, it is possible to prepare, e.g., a survey meter that is not
reactive with these nuclides by the application of the invention.
[0024] As described above, because the invention utilizes a method of analyzing the time
interval of incident pulses from α-ray releasing nuclides, even the nuclides having
approximate energies can be determined without carrying out a chemical separation.
Also, because in the invention, natural short half-life nuclides can be extracted
and removed as background, even α-ray releasing long half-life nuclides can be simply
and, quickly determined at a high sensitivity by combining the pulse- height discrimination.